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G8 ignores mounting problems in world economy
By Nick Beams
18 July 2006
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In its early years, the heads of government meeting now known
as the G8 was regarded as a means of co-ordinating the policies
of the major capitalist powers to try to overcome major problems
in the world economy.
Those days have long gone. At the conclusion of this years
summit the state of the global economy was listed under Other
Issues in the official summing up. The statement noted merely
that global growth remains strong and has become more broadly
based while there was also discussion on high and
volatile energy prices, global imbalances and growing protectionism.
We re-iterated our commitment to address global imbalances,
working together to remove distortions to the global adjustment
process, promote liberalization of trade and investment, and modernize
the international financial institutions.
The scant attention to the global economy, let alone any discussion
of co-ordinated economic policies, is remarkable given the fact
that, despite continued economic growth, the world economy is
facing a series of problems as serious as any since the so-called
Asian economic crisis of 1997-98.
Oil prices are hitting new records, with predictions that they
could reach as much as $100 per barrel, the risk of a slowdown
in the US economy is increasing, there is a simultaneous tightening
of interest rates in the three major economic regions for the
first time since the early 1980s, growth remains sluggish in Europe
and agreement has yet to be reached on the Doha Round of trade
negotiations, with the prospect that failure to do so will bring
increased protectionism.
The stalled Doha Round was the subject of intense discussions
on the final day of the summit following an intervention by World
Trade Organisation director-general Pascal Lamy.
Lamy, who was mandated by WTO negotiators to try to bridge
the gap in the trade talks after they broke down on July 1, indicated
that progress towards narrowing differences over the past two
weeks had only been marginal.
The deadlock in which we are caught will lead us to failure
very soon if you do not give your ministers further room for negotiation,
he told the meeting.
A failure would send out a strong negative signal for
the future of the world economy and the danger of a resurgence
of protectionism at a time when the pace of globalisation is weighing
heavily on the social and economic fabric of many countries and
when geopolitical instability is on the rise.
The main sticking points are the demands by the US and the
EU for further concessions from the so-called developing countries,
led by Brazil and India, on tariff reductions on industrial products,
and demands that the EU offer bigger cuts in farm tariffs and
the US reduce agricultural subsidies.
It appears that there are sharp differences within the EU.
According to a report in the Financial Times, while the
European Commission president José Manuel Barroso, British
prime minister Tony Blair, German chancellor Angela Merkel and
Italian prime minister Roman Prodi all struck an optimistic note,
the French president Jacques Chirac said the EU had reached the
outer limit of its negotiating mandate.
We have made enough concessions, unless there is a very
important counter offer by our American friends, he told
reporters at the conclusion of the summit.
There is little sign of movement on the US side. American negotiators
have insisted that the US needs new markets for its agricultural
exports but India and other poorer countries have so far rejected
US demands on the grounds that they have to protect small farmers.
Before leaving St Petersburg, Sean Spicer, the spokesman for
US trade representative Susan Schwab, repeated American claims
that others had to move more than the US. On the other hand, an
EU official commented: If the US is calling for ambition
in market access, it needs to show similar ambition in terms of
reducing farm subsidies.
The conflicts over trade indicate that the reason there is
so little discussion on the imbalances in the global economythe
ever-increasing US deficits financed by the central banks of East
Asiais because no common approach can be agreed to on their
resolution.
During the late 1990s in the wake of the Asian economic crisis,
there was considerable discussion on the need for international
co-operation and a new global financial architecture. But at the
St Petersburg summit one of the most significant economic events
of the recent period passed without comment.
The decision by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) last Saturday to lift
its overnight call rate from zero to 0.25 percent ended the six-year
long zero interest rate regime. The BoJ said the decision was
necessary because leaving rates at zero could lead to large
swings in economic activity and prices in the future. The
move has far-reaching implications both for currency relationships
as well as the financial flows which have sustained the $800 billion
US balance of payments deficit.
It means that for the first time since the early 1980s, the
Bank of Japan, the US Federal Reserve and the European Central
Bank are all tightening interest rates and draining away funds
that have been used to finance the assets boom of the past period.
Japanese rate tightening has particular significance because
funds raised in Tokyo have played a key role in financing so-called
carry trades in which funds raised at a cheap rate in one market
are used to finance risky trades in others.
The question now being asked is whether the BoJ decision will
be followed by further increases which would immediately impact
on the world economy. As the Financial Times noted yesterday:
Future rises in Japans interest rates could encourage
Japanese investors to invest their money at home rather than abroad.
The danger is that this could lead to a higher yen and a fall
in the value of foreign assets as a result of lower demand. Less
investment in US assets could bring a bursting of the US housing
bubble and a brake on consumer-led growth, spreading economic
pain across the world.
The economics correspondent of the British Daily Telegraph,
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, described the policy shift as an epochal
turning point, noting that Japanese pension funds, insurers
and individuals hold funds abroad of $2,500 billion, almost equivalent
to the overseas holdings of the rest of the world. If they
repatriate part of this money to exploit rising returns at home,
the world will feel the tremors.
As with all the summits of the recent period, the St Petersburg
gathering prompted comment on the relevance of the G8.
An editorial in the Australian Financial Review on Monday
took up the issue of the Doha Round insisting that it would be
unacceptable if the St Petersburg G8 only manages to produce
the sort of glib, motherhood communiqué which is almost
invariably the production of these summit meetings.
To have met and failed to make a contribution to dealing with
the challenges confronting the global economy would not
only be a lost opportunity but would also leave the value of G8
summits in greater doubt, it said.
Similar sentiments were voiced on the other side of the world.
According to Financial Times columnist Wolfgang Munchau:
The multiple failures of the St Petersburg summit raise
the question of whether the Group of Eight leading industrial
nations still serves a useful purpose. The reason is not a lack
of important issues that require global co-ordination. On the
contrary, rarely has there been a greater need for joint action.
But no matter whether you want to rescue a failing trade round,
improve energy security or influence the global financial markets,
the G8 is the wrong group.
Munchau wrote that the problem of global imbalances, which
had become more acute in recent years, had to be addressed by
a Group of Four consisting of the US, the eurozone, Japan and
China.
But a G4 would no more be able to address the issue of global
imbalances because the problem is not the numbers involved or
the diffuse agenda but the conflicting interests of the major
powers.
See Also:
G8 summit: Geopolitical trial of strength
in St. Petersburg
[13 July 2006]
Banker's bank puzzles over
state of world economy
[30 June 2006]
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